Showing posts with label excerpt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label excerpt. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 December 2016

Blog Tour with Giveaway: Christmas on Crimson Mountain by Michelle Major




Synopsis

LOVE ON THE MOUNTAIN
Peace and quiet—that’s all Connor Pierce wanted from the rented cabin on Crimson Mountain. Yet the caretaker turned out to be lovely April Sanders—a total distraction. As were the two little girls she was caring for. Connor’s plan to forget his painful past soon detoured into giving the ladies a Christmas to remember.
Being named guardian of two motherless girls has upended April’s world. Add to the mix a mysterious, brooding writer claiming he wanted to be left alone while going out of his way to bring a little joy to the girls, and she has quite the quandary. April had counted herself out of a happy ending. But maybe Santa still had a few surprises up his merry old sleeve…
Find out more at: Amazon / B&N

Excerpt from Christmas on Crimson Mountain

“Thank you for taking care of me these past couple of days.”
She sniffed. “It’s my job.”
He acknowledged her words with a small nod, or maybe it was the bitterness creeping into her tone that he recognized. “How are Ranie and Shay?”
“Do you really care?”
“Yes.” He sighed. “Even though I don’t want to care. The other night...on the highway...it affected me. Hearing that scream when the car slid on the road and the headlights moving closer.” He paused and a shudder ran through him. “I’m sorry I disappeared, but I wasn’t fit company for anyone after that.”
“It’s fine.” She tried to hold on to her anger even as it slipped through her body like grains of sand through her fingers. She needed that anger. It was safer with this man. Safer for her heart. “You don’t owe me an explanation.”
“I want to give you one anyway.” His hold on her gentled and he rubbed his thumb over the sensitive flesh on the inside of her wrist. “I’ve missed you, April. I’ve spent the past three years alone, and suddenly I’m lonely without you. I stopped caring. I didn’t think I had it in me to care, and I’m still so turned around. Every little thing sets me off and I can’t stop it. But I also can’t stop wanting to be near you. It doesn’t make sense.”
She closed her eyes against the onslaught of emotions that poured through her at his words and the gentle pressure to her skin.
“Do you know,” he asked, shifting so close now that she could feel his breath against her hair, “that I listen for the door to close after you leave and rush down to the kitchen because your scent lingers after you’re gone?”
She huffed out a laugh that sounded breathless to her own ears. “Are you saying I smell?”
“Like lavender and vanilla. I’ve made an idiot of myself the past two days following traces of you around the house.”
“Why are you telling me this?”
“Because I want you to know what you do to me, even if I should stay away. It’s better for both of us if I turn around and walk back to my bedroom until you’re gone.”
She waited a moment, but he didn’t move. “You’re not walking.”
“Hell if I can make myself go.”
“Don’t go,” she whispered. Slowly, as if she were gentling a stray animal, she lifted her hand. Her finger brushed the prickly strands of his dark beard, and his lips parted.
“I forgot to shave,” he muttered.
“Too busy?”
He took a breath, released it and then nodded. “Writing.”
“Connor,” April whispered. “That’s wonderful.”
He shrugged and looked away. “Who knows how long it will last. But the words are coming. So damn many, drowning me with their force. It’s like...”
She pressed her palm to his cheek, gratified when he leaned into it. “Like what?”
“Like it used to be.” He said the words softly, as if they were an apology. April could feel the tension in his body and wished, just for a moment, she could transfer his pain to herself. Give him a few seconds of remembering what it was like to live without the weight of guilt and sorrow bearing down on him.
“Look at me,” she said, moving closer to him, pressing into his warmth. His arms came around her waist, his hands splayed open against her back. She could feel their heat and strength through the thin cotton of her pajama shirt. So much talent flowed out of those hands. The worlds he created within his imagination and put on paper for readers to discover. “You have a gift, Connor Pierce.”
“It’s not—”
“Don’t say it. Whatever you’re thinking.” She brushed her lips over his. “Those words are in you. The stories you write are part of you.”
“How can they still be there when I’m dead inside, April? They were part of my life before, but now I’m—”
“You’re here,” she told him, and held her hand to his chest. His heartbeat was strong and sure under her palm. “With me. Now.”
“You make me feel things I’d thought I lost the capacity to feel. You make me want things—” His voice broke off as he drew in another deep breath. He leaned down until their foreheads touched. They stood that way for several long moments, her lips just grazing his. She breathed him in and it felt like she was pulling his essence into her lungs. Like he was part of her. A part she thought she’d lost after the illness and heartbreak that had changed who she was inside.
“I’m sorry I can’t be the man you deserve,” he whispered. “I’ll hurt you and girls. I hurt everyone—”
“Not now.” She pressed her mouth to the base of his neck, tasted the salt on his skin and wanted more. “This moment is ours.”
He claimed her mouth then, kissed her until the feel and taste of him was all she knew. Everything else burned away in the flame that was her need for him. He pulled her closer, if that was possible. Their tongues tangled and his hands skimmed under the shirt and up her spine, sending tingles as they moved. His kiss was demanding and consuming, and every inch of her body burned for him. For more.
His lips trailed over her jaw and he nipped at the sensitive flesh of her earlobe. “Will you stay?”
The simple question rocked her. How was it that such a longing could have been buried inside her and she’d never guessed? Even at her most in-love-and-alive, she’d never felt anything quite like the force of her desire for Connor. Still, she shook her head. “I have to go back in case the girls need me. If Shay wakes up...”
“I understand,” he said, pulling his hands from underneath her shirt.
No, her body screamed. Don’t let him go.
“Come with me,” she told him, lacing her fingers with his.
He stared at her, his eyes unreadable once more. She hated that he could slip behind his mask so easily. She wanted to break through until she saw every bit of him, good and bad. She wanted to know him and, in return, allow him access to all the secret places she kept hidden from the rest of the world.

About Michelle Major


Michelle Major grew up in Ohio but dreamed of living in the mountains. Soon after graduating with a degree in Journalism, she pointed her car west and settled in Colorado. Her life and house are filled with one great husband, two beautiful kids, a few furry pets and several well-behaved reptiles. She’s grateful to have found her passion writing stories with happy endings. Michelle loves to hear from her readers at www.michellemajor.com.

Connect with Michelle: Website | Facebook | Twitter | Goodreads | Amazon

Giveaway





Monday, 17 October 2016

Blog Tour with Excerpt & Giveaway: All Laced Up By Erin Fletcher



Click for:  Tour Schedule (and discover some guest posts, interviews, reviews and fab blogs)





All Laced Up by Erin Fletcher
Publication Date:  October 10, 2016
Publisher:  Entangled Teen Crush

BLURB


Everyone loves hockey superstar Pierce Miller. Everyone except Lia Bailey.


When the two are forced to teach a skating class to save the rink, Lia’s not sure she’ll survive the pressure of Nationals and Pierce’s ego. Not only can’t he remember her name, he signed her bottle of water like she was one of his groupies. Ugh.

But if there’s one thing Lia knows better than figure skating, it’s hockey. Hoping to take his ego down a notch—or seven—she logs into his team website under an anonymous name to give him pointers on his less-than-stellar playing.

Turns out, Pierce isn’t arrogant at all. And they have a lot in common. Too bad he’s falling for the anonymous girl online. No matter how much fun they’re starting to have in real life, she’s afraid he’s going to choose fake-Lia over the real one…

Disclaimer: This book contains a swoony hockey player (and his equally swoony friends!), one-too-many social media accounts, kisses that’ll melt ice, and a secret identity that might not be so secret after all…

BOOK LINKS

iBooks

Excerpt

Chapter One


Lia

I had taught young skaters before, but somehow I didn’t think “Zamboni avoidance” was covered in
basic skills class.

I skated toward the hulking machine that should have been re-surfacing the rough ice. Instead, it sat
in the middle of the rink with its ancient hood hanging open, innards revealed.

“Mr. Kozlov?” I called, my voice echoing through the cold air of the empty rink.

“The Lia Bailey?” a voice called back from somewhere near the engine.

The Lia Bailey. He always preceded my name with the specifying article. Like I was someone. “It’s me.What’s going on?”

Mr. Kozlov’s head and shoulders popped up behind the exposed engine. As usual, his white hair stood in seventeen different directions. Something black—grease, maybe?—covered his left temple, next to his bushy white eyebrows and kind blue eyes. “Old Bessie. She’s sick.”

Each Zamboni at The Ice House was named after a large animal, real or otherwise: Bessie, Shamu,
Dumbo. I could never keep them straight, but Mr. Kozlov always did. “How bad is it?” I asked.

He disappeared back under the hood with some clanking sounds. “Don’t know. Try to start her.”

I carefully pulled myself up onto the machine using elbows and knees so I didn’t have to step on
anything with my exposed skate blades. I put one hand on the key in the ignition. “Now?”

“Now.”

I turned the key, but all I received in response were some slow, mechanical grunts. Nothing about the
grunts sounded encouraging.

Mr. Kozlov’s head appeared again, the frown on his face accentuating his wrinkles.

“Maybe you should call someone to come look at it,” I said.

He waved off the idea as if it were preposterous. “Takes too much money.”

“But you’ll have money after this workshop, right? That’s the whole point?”

“Yes! And then I fix the heat in the boys’ locker room! Or the roof in rink two, you know, where we
put buckets every time it rains? Or maybe the scoreboard in rink three!” He laughs. “They complain
the visiting team’s score is eight. Always eight. I tell them eight is a good score in hockey, no?”

I was starting to think this ten-week workshop he’d asked me to teach needed to be more like ten
years to pay for everything that needed to be fixed. When he’d mentioned the idea for the workshop,
I’d volunteered right away. I’d do whatever it took to save the rink that was as much my home as my
house. “What are we going to do about the kids? Is either one of the other rinks free at ten?”

“Hockey in both,” came the muffled reply along with more clanking.

That was a good sign. The ice arena needed to stay busy on Saturday mornings during hockey season
to keep the place afloat. But it didn’t help my current predicament. I was about to have a bunch of
tiny new skaters on the ice who presumably wouldn’t be able to steer around Bessie or stop before
crashing into her. If Mr. Kozlov couldn’t afford a scoreboard, he definitely couldn’t afford a lawsuit.

“Don’t you worry,” Mr. Kozlov said, “Bessie will be fixed before kids arrive.”

Thankfully, he sounded more confident than I felt. “How many kids are you expecting?”

“Twenty-two!”

There was no way I heard that right. The last time we talked about the workshop, there were five kids
registered with the possibility of a sixth. “I’m sorry, how many?”

“Twenty-two little skate cadets,” he confirmed, like it was no big deal. “Try the engine again, please.”

I didn’t move, frozen in place by the impossibility of single-handedly pointing forty-four skates in the
right direction and wiping twenty-two runny noses. “I thought you said there were going to be six!”

He just laughed. “The Lia Bailey! Turn the key, please.”

Reluctantly, I did as I was told. From the sound of it, Bessie was just as reluctant as I was.

Mr. Kozlov popped his head back out for a second. “Don’t you worry. Not twenty-two by yourself. You have a co-teacher.”

It never failed to amaze me that Mr. Kozlov could memorize rink schedules and the past hundred
years of hockey history, but couldn’t remember to tell me things like the fact that I had a co-teacher
for the workshop I thought I was teaching on my own. “Who’s teaching with me?”

“Ah-ha!” Mr. Kozlov sounded thrilled about whatever he’d just discovered under Bessie’s hood.
“Problem fixed. Try her again.”

“Who am I teaching with? Mackenzie?” Mackenzie and I weren’t close friends—we didn’t have many classes together and only occasionally saw each other at the rink—but it might be fun teaching with her. If nothing else, she could handle eleven of the kids.

Mr. Kozlov slammed Bessie’s hood shut with a confidence that suggested whatever he’d done had
solved the problem. “Mackenzie’s skates aren’t dull enough,” he said, as if that were an explanation.
“Not Mackenzie. Start Bessie’s engine!” When I didn’t do as he asked, he shooed me off the seat, back onto the ice where I came from. “Your co-teacher is Pierce,” he said. Then he started Bessie’s engine, letting out an enthusiastic whoop as she purred to life.

I blanched. Pierce. There was only one Pierce I knew. It couldn’t be him. Under no circumstances
could I spend the next ten weeks teaching with the Pierce I knew. “Wait, Pierce? Pierce Miller?” I
asked, but Bessie’s engine was too loud, and Mr. Kozlov was already halfway down the rink,
occasionally checking the ice behind him to make sure it was smooth.

I struggled to remember the last time I’d been forced to interact with Pierce Miller. Since he advanced from Troy Preparatory Academy’s hockey team to USA Hockey’s National Team Development Program, I’d seen a lot less of him. Less at the rink because his new team practiced at an ice arena in Plymouth, a few cities over, and less at school because of his travel schedule with the team.

And when I did see him? Pierce was very good at not giving me the time of day.

The last interaction I had with him was at the rink shortly after he’d secured his place on the NTDP
team. A gaggle of hockey players and their parents had stuck around after Pierce’s practice to get his
autograph. Everyone in the city of Troy knew Pierce was going to be The Next Big Thing in hockey and teenage athlete celebrities. But when I walked into the rink for my practice while his crowd of adoring fans was walking out, Pierce must have thought I had been left behind.

“Oh, I missed one?” he asked, Sharpie still in hand. He grabbed my water bottle, signed a signature
too perfect to be anything other than practiced, and handed it back. When he smiled at me, he
somehow managed to do it without even looking at me. “Gotta run,” he said, “but thanks for the
support!”

No acknowledgment that we’d shared the same ice rink for most of our lives. No recognition that
we’d had two classes together freshman year. No noticing that I might be headed to practice of my
own and just wanted something to drink.

I’d tossed the water bottle in the trash and spent my practice annoyed and thirsty.

After that, I did my best to stay away from Pierce, even if ignoring him completely was impossible. It
wasn’t enough that he was popular at school and the local ice arenas, but a few news outlets had
grabbed hold of his YouTube channel, mostly his greatest hockey hits and the video equivalent of
selfies, and turned him into a web celeb. A few professional teams were already showing interest in
him. A model-perfect guy with endless charm and enough talent to attract the scouts could rule the
world. Or at least his corner of the world, which was unfortunate, because it was a corner of the
world I was apparently destined to share.

As Mr. Kozlov finished the final pass over the ice, I skated over to the Zamboni bay. “You didn’t mean Pierce Miller, did you?” I asked as soon as he cut off the engine.

Mr. Kozlov started shoveling away the small pile of ice the machine left behind. “Yes! Champion figure skater, champion hockey player, perfect team to teach future Olympians.”

Oh no. “You marketed it that way, didn’t you? That’s how you got the numbers from five to
twenty-two?”

Mr. Kozlov set the shovel aside and smiled at me. He had definitely taken a puck or two to the nose
when he was younger, if the curvature was any indication. But his smile was straight and wide.
“Perhaps.” He started closing the Zamboni bay doors.

“I’m not a figure-skating champion.”

“Local champion. Regional champion. Champion.”

Mr. Kozlov closed the other door and started walking around the outside of the ice. I followed along,
letting my skates slide effortlessly across the smooth surface. I raised my voice a little so he could hear me over the rink’s half wall. “Not at senior level. Not at nationals. Not a champion that counts.”
Mr. Kozlov stopped walking, reached over, and pointed at me, pressing one finger hard enough
against the glass to turn his finger completely white. “The Lia Bailey, you count. Senior or national or
not. You count.”

My cheeks warmed. He believed in me more than I believed in myself. Mr. Kozlov continued walking, and I glanced up at the clock on the scoreboard. Several of the tiny round bulbs were burned out, but it was clearly nine forty-five. Fifteen minutes before the workshop was scheduled to start. I reached the rink’s exit and slipped on my blade guards before stepping off the ice. “Can’t I just teach the workshop by myself?”

Mr. Kozlov handed me a clipboard with some papers and a pen. “What is wrong with Pierce Miller?”

I bit back the “he’s an arrogant jerk who will be a terrible influence on anyone under the age of ten”
response that wanted to roll off my tongue. “Nothing. I just think I could do a better job on my own.”

An abandoned water bottle lay on one of the benches near the bleachers. Mr. Kozlov deposited it in
the garbage can. “He is best hockey player at this rink. Best to teach kids’ hockey.”

“I know,” I said, because it was true. Pierce was the best candidate. But that still didn’t mean I wanted to teach with him. “It’s just that he…he’s not…”

“Ah,” Mr. Kozlov said. “You don’t like him.”

If I said yes, I would sound immature, like I was in first grade and Pierce had cooties. I wasn’t
altogether sure that he didn’t have cooties, but I shook my head. “I just don’t know how well he’s
going to do with kids.” The smooth cover was also true. Mr. Kozlov would have to listen to that.

Instead, he patted my shoulder. “Pierce will be fine. Give him a chance.”

I glanced up at the clock again. There was a chance he wouldn’t even show up. That would be like
him. But as appealing as that possibility was, I’d have to handle all twenty-two kids on my own. My
knees wobbled at the thought.

When the doors to the arena lobby swung open to reveal a tiny girl with her mom carrying the world’s tiniest, most adorable figure skates, I clutched my clipboard.

Never in a million years did I think I’d say it, but I needed Pierce Miller.

Even though it was cold in the rink, sweat was beading on the back of my neck. Pierce hadn’t shown
up, but all twenty-two of the kids had. Twenty-one of them were currently lined up against the wall,
waiting for the workshop to start. However, I couldn’t get started because the twenty-second child, a
tiny five-year-old named Olivia, would not stop crying.

Olivia had weak ankles and seemingly zero balance. She’d fallen the second her blades hit the ice. She fell again while trying to get up. She fell while holding onto the wall. She fell while moving. She fell while standing still. 

And each time she fell, she cried a little harder.

Now, I was holding Olivia up on the ice on her wobbly ankles and trying to soothe her. The little girl
wasn’t injured, just frustrated. If I let her get off the ice now, chances were good she’d never step
back onto it again. If the tears would stop for just a few minutes, I would be able to help get her feet
under her and we could go from there. But either one of those tasks would take individual attention I
didn’t have time to give.

“Olivia, please stop crying and I’ll help you, okay? I’m not going to let go until you’re ready, but you
have to stop crying so I can talk to the other kids.”

Apparently Olivia interpreted this to mean “scream at the top of your lungs.” I was about to resort to
bribery in the form of candy from the snack bar when another skater hopped on the ice from the far
door. I glanced up and relief flooded my limbs.

Pierce was here after all.

“Sorry I’m late.” He skated over and came to a hockey stop just a foot or two away from me, sending a spray of ice shavings everywhere. All over me. All over Olivia. All over the closest four or five kids on the wall. He brushed a few of them off, seemingly unsure of what to do with his hands when he got to me. “Er…sorry.”

“Whoa,” one of the older kids said. “I want to learn how to do that.”

Olivia stopped crying. Twenty-one jaws dropped open, but mine wasn’t one of them. No, I was too
busy gawking. You’d think I’d never seen him before, but whoa. Pierce was hot. Possibly hotter than
the last time I’d seen him. Tall with light brown hair and a body that showed just how much he
worked out. Hazel eyes with more green than brown. Something about his jaw made him seem older
than he actually was.

But then he had to use that jaw to open his mouth.

“It’s Mia, right?”

Four years at the same school and the same rink and he could only get 66 percent of the letters in my
name correct? “Lia. With an L.”

Olivia started whimpering, so I hushed her in what I hoped was a soothing way.

“Lia,” Pierce echoed. He didn’t bother introducing himself, as if everyone knew who he was. Which
they did, but still.

“You’re Pierce Miller,” said one of the older boys who was wearing a hockey helmet way too big for
his head. “My dad says you’re going to play for the Red Wings.”

Pierce turned toward the row of young skaters, as if noticing them for the first time. “I hope so, little
man.”

“I saw you on YouTube!” one of the girls said. Though her outfit was predominately pink, she was
wearing a tiny pair of hockey skates.

I was so distracted by the kids’ hero-worship that Olivia slipped out of my grasp, fell, and started
crying again.

“I’m sorry, Olivia,” I said as I picked the little girl up and struggled to set her on her skate blades again. The muscles in my back were starting to protest being stooped over for so long.

“I want to skate!” one of the kids said.

“Yeah,” another echoed.

The start of a riot. Crap. Like it or not, I was going to have to ask Pierce for help. “Look, you can either take her,” I said, nodding to Olivia, “or—”

Before I could finish the other option, Pierce scooped Olivia up and settled her against his hip, her
skates hanging down toward his knees. Instantly, her tears stopped.

“Olivia, is it?” Pierce asked. “‘Atta girl. You’re okay.”

That wasn’t what I had wanted him to do. Picking her up was just as bad as taking her off the ice. Now he wouldn’t be able to put her down, and when he did, she’d just fall or start crying again. But there was nothing I could do about that now, and I had the rest of the kids to worry about.

“Okay, everyone. I want you to let go of the wall and step out in front of you, just like you’re walking,” I said. One of the kids fell and knocked two others down, but the rest stayed on their feet. “Good job, guys! Now pick up your feet, one at a time.”

The kids went back and forth across the rink like that, sometimes falling, always crashing into the
hockey boards both because they didn’t know how to stop and because it was hilarious enough to
cause a fit of laughter every single time. Once they mastered walking, they started pushing off with
each foot and gliding, picking up a little speed. I grabbed push bars for the few kids who fell the most, but the others seemed okay.

Every once in a while, I glanced over at Pierce and Olivia. He carried her in his arms for a few minutes, and then put her back down on the ice with his hands supporting her under her armpits. Surprisingly, there were no tears. He skated around the rink with her like that for a while. I got distracted while trying to teach the kids forward swizzles, and the next time I looked over, Olivia was on her own; still weak-ankled and wobbly, but not falling. Even better, she was smiling.

Not that Pierce would have noticed. Now that his hands were free, his phone was out of his pocket,
and he was frantically typing something with his thumbs. He was smiling, too.

Texting a girl, maybe?

“Straight to the Olympics with this one,” he said without looking up from his phone as they skated by
me and the rest of the group.

“I want to go to the Olympics!” one of the little girls yelled right before falling on her butt.

“Me too,” another girl said before tripping over the first.

“Okay, okay.” I helped both of them back to their feet. “Swizzles first. Olympics second.” And
apparently not at all if Pierce was their teacher. But I kept that comment to myself. I glanced up at the
clock on the scoreboard. Not nearly enough time had passed. I was already more exhausted than if I’d
run a long program full-out four times in a row.

It was going to be a long ten weeks.

About the Author


Erin is a young adult author from North Carolina. She is a morning person who does most of her writing before sunrise, while drinking excessive quantities of coffee. She believes flip-flops qualify as year-round footwear, and would spend every day at the beach if she could. She has a bachelor's degree in mathematics, which is almost never useful when writing books.


Giveaway

·         A signed copy of All Laced Up + a $10 Amazon Gift Card (An eBook copy of All Laced Up will be substituted for those outside of the US)










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Tuesday, 3 November 2015

Blitz w/ excerpt & giveaway : DEATH BECOMES ME (CALL ME GRIM #2) BY ELIZABETH HOLLOWAY


click banner above to see tour schedule

Death Becomes Me
(Call Me Grim #2)
by Elizabeth Holloway
Publication Date:  November 2015
Genre:  YA, Paranormal


Synopsis

Libbi and Aaron are Grim Reapers on the run. They may have escaped their hometown of Carroll Falls unscathed, and are together and alive (well, more or less), but they’ll soon find there’s a price to pay. A deadly one.

By escaping Carroll Falls, Libbi and Aaron have broken the Reaper’s covenant with Abaddon, aka Death himself – and now they’re right at the top of Abaddon’s Most Wanted list. There’s nowhere to hide, and not a single person, alive or dead, they can turn to for help.

But just as it's looking like the end of the line, Libbi hears word of a Reaper in hiding – a Reaper who once escaped Abaddon's wrath. Finding this mysterious Reaper might be the perfect solution… if Death doesn’t find them first.


Purchase Links:

Amazon | B&N

Excerpt


“She’s in the house,” I say.

“I know.” He snatches his shoes from my hands and shoves his sockless feet into them. “We’ve got to get out of here.”

“How? She’s downstairs. We’ll run right into her.”

He glances at the wall behind him and shakes his head. Nope. Can’t get out that way.  He turns back around and points straight at the wall of junk that blocks the expansive attic.

“We run through all of that,” he says. “And when we get outside, we fly.”

As huge as the attic is, it looks like a postage stamp when I think of using it as a runway. Plus, I have to run through all of that stuff? I really wish I had more time to practice the Reaper powers before we left Carroll Falls. It would have been useful.

“That’s not enough of a head start for me, Aaron,” I say. “Still a novice, here.”

The attic door squeaks. A solid thump on the bottom step.

“No time for a better plan.” He seizes my hand. “Whatever happens, don’t let her touch you. Got it?”
I nod once.

And we run. Back the way we came. Straight through the wardrobe with the broken door. Through the leaning towers of boxes and mountains of clothes and papers and trash. Toward Bobby’s bedroom.
The attic stairs appear in the middle of the rubbish. We have to pass them if we want enough speed to fly when we reach the wall at the other end of the house.

An ashen hand slaps down on the railing at the top of the staircase. Annalise’s greasy, dark head pops up above the railing. Her head rotates. The skin on her neck cracks and greenish-yellow fluid leaks from the wound. Her eyes find us.

I was right. There are no eyes there. Just inky-black orbs.

“What are you doing?” The voice that oozes from her throat is deep, cold, menacing. But there’s no mistaking the surprise in it. “You don’t belong here.”

Oily tendrils of blackness unfurl from the little girl’s shadow like tentacles. They spill over the railing and crawl across the floor in front of us. The coppery scent of decomposition fills the space. Whoever she used to be, she’s a corpse now. A reanimated, rotting corpse. Mothballs suddenly don’t smell so bad.

“Jump.” Aaron says and I do. We sail over whatever it is that seeps from her shadow as we sprint past her.

Annalise reaches for my arm. I jerk my elbow across my body before she touches me and the breeze from her fingertips grazes my skin.

It was just the wind that touched me, I’m sure, but for a moment my vision blurs. A flash of light replaces the junk-filled attic, then pale, twisted, writhing bodies. Blood. Broken bones. Pain. So much pain. And fear.

Just as quickly as it came, the vision disappears. I almost lose my breakfast on the floor, but I somehow manage to keep running. We barrel through another mountain of junk—more furniture and boxes—and into Bobby’s bedroom.

Book 1 Synopsis


The truck should have turned Libbi Piper into a Libbi Pancake—and it would have, too, if Aaron hadn't shown up and saved her life. The problem? Aaron's the local Grim Reaper . . . and he only saved Libbi's life because he needs someone to take over his job. Now, Libbi has two days to choose between dying like she was supposed to, or living a lonely life as Death Incarnate. Talk about a rock and a hard place. And the choice goes from hard to sucktastic when her best friend shows up marked: condemned as a future murderer. Libbi could have an extra week to stop the murder and fix the mark . . . but only if she accepts Aaron's job as Reaper, trapping herself in her crappy town forever, invisible and inaudible to everyone except the newly dead. But, if she refuses? Her best friend is headed straight for Hell.


Giveaway

  • One (1) winner will receive a $15 Amazon gift card and a digital copy of  Death Becomes Me by Elizabeth Holloway  (INT)
  • Four (4) winners will receive a digital copy of Death Becomes Me by Elizabeth Holloway (INT)


About the author


Elizabeth Holloway is a writer of young adult fiction living in Southern Pennsylvania with her two teen children and their growing number of pets.


In addition to writing, she is a registered nurse, an avid reader, an out-of-practice artist, a karaoke singer, and music lover. She is still trying to decide what she wants to be when she grows up.

Connect with the Author:  Website | Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads | Instagram






Tuesday, 27 October 2015

Blitz w/ Giveaway & Excerpt: TROLL by Ashley Harris



Seductive teens & trolls meet #Gameofthrones! 

Get ready for a rollicking action and adventure story set in a magical world where a creature emerges from thousands of miles underground, seeking revenge, treasure, and a key that once belonged to an old enemy. Fans of the Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis and The Vampire Diaries  by J. L. Smith will be enchanted by this new YA novel selected by Kindle Scout readers for publication!

Follow the blitz and enter to win great prizes! 



Visit all the blogs participating in the blitz for more chances to win! 

October 26th
Brooke Blogs Author Interview 
My Midnight Fantasies Spotlight + Excerpt
Reading In Wonderland Spotlight + Excerpt
T&L Book Reviews Review + Guest Post

October 27th
Deal Sharing Aunt Author Interview
Opinionated Cupcakes Spotlight + Excerpt
Just Books & Rainne's Ramblings Author Interview

October 28th
Nicole's Book Musings Spotlight + Excerpt
Mama Reads Hazel Sleeps Review + Guest Post
Becky on Books Spotlight + Excerpt
Kindle and Me Review + Guest Post
Book Briefs Review

October 29th
Oh My Growing TBR Spotlight + Excerpt
Jeri's Book Attic Review
Evermore Books Spotlight + Excerpt
One Book Two Review

October 30th
Crystal's Chaotic Confessions Spotlight + Excerpt
Mikky's World Of Books Spotlight + Excerpt
Happily Ever Chapter Spotlight + Excerpt
Kayl's Krazy Obsession Author Interview
Miranda's Book Blog Author Interview


About Troll: 

Title: Troll
Author: Ashley C. Harris
Author Location: FL, United States
Genre: Young Adult, Paranormal Fantasy
Release Date: October 6, 2015
Words: 319 pages
Publisher: Kindle Press
Format: Digital eBook
AISN: B013VAU5KA

Synopsis:  At the age of sixteen, Abby is undergoing major household changes. Her mom is getting ready to remarry and her new step-brother is driving her insane. She is just trying to keep herself busy with school and her part-time job when a most deliciously handsome stranger moves to her little seaside town and won't leave her alone.
New arrival Wilhelm is unlike any other student at Abby’s school. His emerald eyes and tattooed body don’t truly reveal what he really is: a creature emerged from thousands of miles underground, seeking revenge, treasure, and a key that once belonged to an old enemy – a key Abby wears suspended from a chain around her neck. Why she has it is a mystery that Wilhelm will need to solve, and fast, in order to defeat a powerful mortal adversary.
As an attraction between Abby and Wilhelm develops, more creatures like Wilhelm are drawn from beneath the ground to Abby’s town; wreaking havoc as they offer Abby’s classmates the fulfillment of their deepest desires. Will Abby and her new family survive as a game of magical warfare is unleashed? Her ability to reverse Wilhelm’s bargain depends on it.

Available at Amazon.

Excerpt
Seconds went by and he found nothing, except a distraction. It wasn’t the human’s heartbeat drumming steadily on the second floor that he found unnerving, most likely it was the fact that she was reading a rhyme aloud – that wasn’t a human thing as much as it was a trolls’: “A kiss was made,” he heard her voice whisper, trying to ignore it. “A rose was dropped.” He looked up when she said the word rose. “A heart was snapped in half. The love of your life has left you in a world that’s dark and black.”
He moved toward the sound. Perhaps she was really one of his kind in disguise, here to spy on him.
“Thunder sounds, the sky turns gray, there is nothing recognizable at all. The love of your life has left you in a world that’s sad and small.” The words made him think about Helena, his Helena, kissing Klaus, while he had her fully under his control. It was sickened him and pissed him off.
He crept down the bookcase where a girl was reading from a book out loud, unaware of his presence. She was definitely not a troll, he concluded when he got a good look at her, growing bored. “But then the sun comes out. A rainbow appears. An angel has come to tell you, your hope is stronger than fear.”
“Are you sure that’s what an angel would say?” he asked.
Her blue, puppy-like eyes shot up, her body nearly jumping out of its skin from being startled. “Where did you come from?” she squeaked as she looked around, her heartbeat doubling.
“About five shelves over,” he answered as he looked her up and down. She was a tiny, petite thing compared to himself, with light brown hair and blushed fair skin that made her blue eyes pop. She also had four freckles on one cheek and three on the other. This human was both plain looking but also strangely captivating compared to others in the building.
“Oh, I see, and were you standing there the entire time?” she asked, her free hand going to her hip, as she tried to stand up straighter, trying to seem tall and authoritative. He could see she was irritated at being disturbed, and that was the most entertaining thing of all.
“Yes, is that a problem?” he asked with a smile.
“Yes!”
“I’m sorry … I thought you worked here. I was just looking for some help,” he lied. Did she think he wouldn’t notice the fact that she was standing next to a filing cart and wearing a library badge that read: Abigail? That, and the feelings of servitude and obligation that he could smell all over her. 
“Oh, I – I do,” she said, as if this had just occurred to her. She was unable to wipe the annoyance and unease off her face, as she looked down his arm, judging him because of his numerous tattoos. Humans...so sadly sheltered. “How can I help you?”
He didn’t answer. This irritated her more.
“The college used book section is downstairs, and so is the art and tattoo section,” she suggested, trying to guess his reason for pestering her.
“Do I really look old enough to be in college to you?” he asked, half insulted because college years for humans were death years for his kind.
“Yes,” she said honestly as she took in his tall, six-foot-five frame. “You look at least twenty.”
“Nope, time to get your eye’s checked maybe?” he asked, stepping closer, letting her guess his age; this seemed like a game she didn’t want to play.
“Well you’re definitely a least eighteen,” she replied as she turned part of her body away from him, her eyes back to her books; as if being eighteen put him in a different category than her. “You’d have to be to get a tattoo, now is—”
“Or maybe I had really cool parents,” he cut her off. “And I’m seventeen. That was an enchanting poem you read by the way. Who was it by?”
He took another step closer as she took a step back, nearly colliding into a bookshelf. “Amber Paris.” She handed him the book she’d read from and appeared much more comfortable when he was looking at it and not her. He examined it with only partial interest. “She got it published when she was fifteen.” she seemed to know all about the subject.
“Well, that explains why it’s so good, then. People always come up with their best work when they’re young. I bet at twelve her poems were even better.”
Each word he spoke was like a hook, spinning magic to pull her in to him even as she wanted to get away. “Where are you from, exactly?” she asked as she noticed what he was wearing; heavy jeans instead of the more typically Floridian surfer shorts, and a thick dark green shirt that went down to his elbows, only showing off half of his tattoos. Probably weird attire for the hottest months of Florida, but as a troll he craved warmth and hated the cold. “Are you from up north?”
“No, not at all,” he said, offering no other explanation. “So, why read a poem aloud? What about you does it relates to?” he asked with a grin, it was a pretty personal question and yet she’d have to tell him. Soon his powers if he kept talking to her would be able to push Abby to do all sorts of things... for a short time anyway, until a price was paid.
He read over the beginning lines of the poem again. “A kiss was made, a rose was dropped.” The words tripped him up, making him think about Rosabel’s last feelings before she died. Feelings that held a deep meaning for him, letting him know that even though she had never been able to claim him as an inheritor, she still had cared about him more than any other treasure.
His eyes could have almost teared up just thinking about his murdered mother. Trolls could be insanely emotional – good thing for him he was better at shielding how he felt than most. He turned his face away, getting a hold of himself, as the little human rambled, her voice a comforting distraction.
“I don’t think it relates to me. I just write poetry so my teacher asked me to look over another writer’s work.”
“Because maybe you want to be like this writer, famous and well liked?” he stated to test if her interest in the author was shallow, sensing what she didn’t even know was one of her most hidden desires. Humans could be so naive about their own ambitions, but these were easily recognized by trolls. This one clearly had no idea what her body and mind were capable of yearning for.
“No,” she lied, as if insulted. “That’s crazy. I’ve never wanted that; it’s just an assignment.”
“Are you sure?” he asked, as her hidden wants started calling to him – they tasted satisfying too. Her craving for freedom, he could use that to trap her, and then trap all the humans here. He’d have some real fun after a day of anger and sorrow as he played with these fools until they broke.
Leave her alone! a small boy’s voice suddenly screamed into his ear. He turned around, startled, only to find no one behind him.
“Are you okay?” he heard Abby ask him. His face must have looked haunted. That’s when he sensed where the book that he had been searching for was. 
“Yes.” Finding the book and his key were far more important than this girl or having a little fun. He looked back in Abby’s direction, now needing to get rid of her. She looked nervous and still confused by his presence, still not knowing why she was continuing to talk to him. He decided in that moment to show her the kind of mercy and kindness his mother Rosabel should have received. Besides, he really didn’t feel like killing anyone innocent so the knights couldn’t find them later. 
Before she could move, he reached out and gripped her shoulder, sending heat through her body, making her look deep into his eyes. “If you ever see me or anything like me again, anyone that has markings like this…,” he lifted his sleeve so she could take in his entire arm. His tattoos on it came to life and moved hypnotically, numbing her senses and making her go into a trance. “… you probably shouldn’t trust us. You should be smart and stay away from anyone like myself that you ever come in contact with.”
And with those words, he had given her a precious gift he hadn’t given any other human in a very long time. If any more trolls came along she’d stay out of their way now, wanting nothing to do with them. He watched her walk off in a beautiful daze. She’d certainly stay away from him if he changed his mind in the next few moments and decided to pursue her after all. Trolls often did change their minds about most things. He imagined her lips would have tasted pretty good, for a human anyway. Her body would have most likely felt nice …
Please leave her alone! he heard the boy scream again, the voice coming from his head. He was hearing a past memory, one that was too dangerous for him to think about. He ran his fingers along the book spines one more time. They led him right to the familiar texture he had been looking for. To the very storybook a young knight had checked out and carried in his backpack years before Wilhelm had found him.

About Ashley C. Harris


Author and film director Ashley C. Harris resides in Florida. Ashley was first recognized for her edgy writing and unique film work when she wrote and directed the teenage film "Lines". Lines was the first feature film in the world captured using only Mac Laptops. 


In 2013 she teamed up with Barclay Publicity to release the first in a new young adult novel series, "Shock Me". Ashley then went on to author eight other titles, in multiple genres, as she also worked behind-the-scenes on a morning news show that aired on ABC. In 2014, four of Ashley's books landed on the Amazon's Best Selling Top-Ten-List. In 2015, she received her first publishing deal for "Troll", a KindleScout novel winner. 

When Ashley is not dreaming up new manuscripts and working on film sets, she loves spending time with her family, obsessing about biblical mysteries, and watching lots of Doctor Who. Keep an eye out for her newest releases!

Connect with Ashley at: Website | Facebook | Twitter | GoodReads | Tumblr | Instagram